Recruiting foreign workers for Canadian positions is a regulated activity. Most provinces require recruitment licenses, ESDC enforces specific prohibitions on what can be charged to workers, and CRA / provincial labour boards investigate violations. This page covers what Canadian employers and authorized recruiters need to know to recruit foreign workers compliantly.
Foreign recruitment at a glance
- Federal rules: Cannot charge recruitment fees to workers (TFWP and IMP)
- Provincial licenses required in: Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Nova Scotia, BC (partial), Alberta (recruitment for own employees only — no third-party recruitment)
- Maximum penalties: Federal up to $100,000 per LMIA violation; provincial up to $250,000 (Ontario EPFNA Act)
- Required disclosures: Written agreements, wage, working conditions, costs, return terms
- Always: Employer pays all recruitment costs — including agency fees, advertising, travel arrangements
Two types of recruitment
1. Employer self-recruitment
The Canadian employer directly sources and screens candidates without using a third-party recruiter. Most provinces don't require a license for this. The employer is fully responsible for:
- Job Bank posting and additional advertising
- Application screening and interviews
- Reference checks and credential verification
- Visa/work permit guidance (or refer to a licensed RCIC)
- Cross-border travel arrangements
2. Third-party recruitment
The employer engages a licensed recruiter to source candidates. The recruiter must hold a valid provincial license (where required) and follow strict rules about what they can charge and to whom.
Provincial recruitment licensing
| Province | Recruitment license required? | Governing statute |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Yes — for any recruitment of foreign workers | EPFNA Act (Employment Protection for Foreign Nationals Act) |
| Manitoba | Yes — recruitment + worker registration required | WRAPA (Worker Recruitment and Protection Act) |
| Saskatchewan | Yes — recruiter license + employer registration | FWRIS Act |
| Nova Scotia | Yes — for foreign worker recruitment | Labour Standards Code |
| BC | No general license; restrictions on charging fees to workers | Employment Standards Act |
| Alberta | License only for foreign worker recruitment | Fair Trading Act |
| Quebec | No general license; CNESST enforcement | CNESST regulations |
Prohibited practices (federal + most provinces)
- Charging fees to workers for recruitment services, including "application fees," "processing fees," "training fees," or "deposits"
- Reclaiming costs through wage deductions — illegal under both federal and provincial rules
- Confiscating passports or other identity documents
- Threatening deportation or other adverse action if worker complains or seeks to change jobs
- Misrepresenting the job (wage, location, duties, working conditions)
- Charging for visa or work permit processing when the worker themselves is required to pay these fees directly
- Requiring "bonded" employment — debt-tied work prohibition
What employers should require from any recruiter
- Provincial license verification — confirm valid license in employer's province AND worker's destination province
- Written recruitment agreement — specifying fees (paid by employer), services covered, refund terms, dispute resolution
- Compliance attestations — recruiter certifies no fees collected from workers, no prohibited practices
- Documentation of worker fees — proof that no fees were paid by the worker for the recruitment service
- Privacy compliance — recruiter must handle worker data per PIPEDA / provincial privacy laws
- Insurance and bonding — many provinces require recruiters to post a bond ($25k–$50k)
Red flags — fraudulent recruitment indicators
- Asks workers to pay "registration," "application," or "deposit" fees
- Refuses to disclose the actual Canadian employer until after fees are paid
- Promises guaranteed work permits or PR (no recruiter can guarantee outcomes)
- Requires payment via wire transfer to personal accounts (not corporate)
- No verifiable provincial license
- No physical Canadian office address
- Pressure tactics, urgency, "limited spots"
- Asks workers to falsify credentials, experience, or education
What workers can do if defrauded
- File complaint with the worker's provincial labour board (Ontario MLT, Manitoba ESB, etc.)
- Report to ESDC Confidential Tip Line
- Contact the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety
- If still in home country and not yet entered Canada — contact local consumer protection authorities
- Apply for a Vulnerable Worker OWP if abuse is by current Canadian employer
How we help employers recruit compliantly
- Recruitment authorization assessment — confirm if a license is needed and help apply
- Cross-jurisdiction compliance — for employers recruiting in multiple provinces or from multiple source countries
- Recruitment agreement drafting — vetted contracts that protect both parties
- Recruiter due diligence — verify any third-party recruiters before engagement
- Source-country compliance — Philippines POEA registration, India recruitment regulations, etc.
- Worker onboarding — pre-arrival orientation, post-arrival settlement, work permit coordination
Useful official resources
- Ontario EPFNA — recruiter licensing
- Manitoba WRAPA — recruiter licensing
- Saskatchewan FWRIS — employer registration
- ESDC — Federal foreign worker recruitment rules
Hiring abroad? Recruitment compliance is one of the most-overlooked employer obligations — and one of the most-penalized. We handle licensing, recruiter vetting, and worker onboarding so you can focus on operations. Book a free recruitment compliance assessment.